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Conduct Becoming: Good Wives and Husbands in the Later Middle Ages
Contributor(s): Burger, Glenn D. (Author)
ISBN: 0812249607     ISBN-13: 9780812249606
Publisher: University of Pennsylvania Press
OUR PRICE:   $71.20  
Product Type: Hardcover
Published: October 2017
Qty:
Additional Information
BISAC Categories:
- Literary Criticism | Medieval
- Social Science | Women's Studies
Dewey: 306.872
LCCN: 2017010471
Series: Middle Ages
Physical Information: 1.1" H x 6.4" W x 9.3" (1.30 lbs) 272 pages
Themes:
- Chronological Period - Medieval (500-1453)
- Sex & Gender - Feminine
 
Descriptions, Reviews, Etc.
Publisher Description:

Conduct Becoming examines a new genre of late medieval writing that focuses on a wife's virtuous conduct and ability of such conduct to alter marital and social relations in the world. Considering a range of texts written for women--the journées chrétiennes or daily guides for Christian living, secular counsel from husbands and fathers such as Le Livre du Chevalier de La Tour Landry and Le Menagier de Paris, and literary narratives such as the Griselda story--Glenn D. Burger argues that, over the course of the long fourteenth century, the invention of the good wife in discourses of sacramental marriage, private devotion, and personal conduct reconfigured how female embodiment was understood.

While the period inherits a strongly antifeminist tradition that views the female body as naturally wayward and sensual, late medieval conduct texts for women outline models of feminine virtue that show the good wife as an identity with positive influence in the world. Because these manuals imagine how to be a good wife as necessarily entangled with how to be a good husband, they also move their readers to consider such gendered and sexed identities in relational terms and to embrace a model of self-restraint significantly different from that of clerical celibacy. Conduct literature addressed to the good wife thus reshapes how late medieval audiences thought about the process of becoming a good person more generally. Burger contends that these texts develop and promulgate a view of sex and gender radically different from previous clerical or aristocratic models--one capable of providing the foundations for the modern forms of heterosexuality that begin to emerge more clearly in the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries.